Joseph Dituri (born 8 December 1967) is an American biomedical researcher, and former Naval Commander. Also known as Dr. Deep Sea., his research includes life support equipment design, high carbon dioxide environments, hypobaric medicine, hyperbaric medicine, and traumatic brain injury. He has made contributions in the field as a researcher, speaker, lecturer, and writer, including Exploration and Mixed Gas Diving Encyclopedia: The Tao of Survival Underwater. He served as the Assistant Vice President for Veterans Clinical Research at the University of South Florida.
In 1967, Dituri was born in Long Island, New York. After graduating from Lindenhurst Senior High School, he went on to obtain his B.S. in Computer Science at the University of South Carolina in 1995. He obtained his M.S. in Aeronautical Engineering from the Naval Postgraduate School in 2006. In 2018, he received his Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering from the University of South Florida.
In 1985, Dituri enlisted in the United States Navy. He consistently served aboard naval vessels and at shore stations, engaging in tasks such as hyperbaric system maintenance, saturation diving, search and rescue operations, and ship repair. In 1995, he was commissioned into the Special Operations Officer pipeline and after serving three diving tours, he became the Engineering Duty Officer.
Upon completing his M.S. in 2006, he assumed the role of Officer-in-Charge at the Deep Submergence Unit (DSU) Diving Systems Detachment (DSD). Under his leadership, DSD certified the 2,000 feet sea water Atmospheric Diving System for deployment across the fleet. Following the implementation and initial testing phase, Commander Dituri's team introduced the Submarine Rescue Diving and Recompression System into Naval service, deploying it on two international engagements.
His final position in the United States Navy was in the Research Development and Acquisition Center â Maritime Systems at Special Operations Command. He served as the Chief Engineer, Program Manager for Undersea Systems Technical and Certification Program, as well as Deputy Program Manager for Combat Craft. After 28 years of active service, Dituri retired in 2013.
Dituri is a biomedical researcher in the field of life support equipment design, high carbon dioxide environments, hypobaric medicine, and traumatic brain injury. During his career, he has been a contributing author, co-author, and author in publications, books, and articles including: Secrets in Depth, Hyperbaric Medicine Practice, "Over The Counter" Remedy For DCIs, My Daddy Wears a Different Kind of Suit to Work, and more.
Dituri is a biomedical engineering lecturer at the University of South Florida and instructor of hyperbaric medicine. He serves as a Director of the International Board of Undersea Medicine (IBUM).
Dituri spent 100 days living underwater at the Jules' Undersea Lodge in Key Largo, Florida. During his stay, Dituri earned a spot in the Guinness World Records for the longest time spent living underwater in a fixed habitat.
Dituri was granted a United States Patent for a device and system he designed during his Ph.D. dissertation on systems and methods for monitoring heart rate variability. The processing device monitors heart beat data, and executes a heart rate variability program to detect physiological distress, essential in the prevention of hypercapnia, hyperoxia, and decompressive stress
Dituri is a certified pilot of the U.S. Navy ADS2000 (Atmospheric Diving System), also known as the One Atmosphere Suit.
Dituri was invited to inspect the Deepsea Challenger that James Cameron piloted to the bottom of the Mariana Trench, at a depth of 10,908 metres (35,787 ft)